Quick Study, Lee is catching on

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Quick Study, Lee is catching on
by Scott Birne


IRVING, Texas - Penn State University, affectionately known as "Linebacker U," has been churning out NFL players for the last 60 years: Jack Ham, Matt Millen and LaVar Arrington, to name a few.

As the Cowboys' second-round draft pick, Sean Lee looks to continue the tradition and follow in their footsteps.

Growing up just outside of Pittsburgh, Lee played safety and tailback in high school, not linebacker. Despite not playing the position until college, he quickly understood the significance of playing at Linebacker U.

"When you get to Penn State, you learn the tradition and you try to keep that going by being tough, hard-working, blue-collar types of players who love to play football and love to help their team win football games," he said.

At last weekend's rookie mini-camp, Lee received personal attention from Cowboys linebackers coach Reggie Herring as the only linebacker among 35 rookies and eligible first-year veterans.

Lee is learning how to play both 3-4 inside linebacker positions, the "Mike" and "Mo." The Cowboys believe he can back up both starters, Bradie James and Keith Brooking, as well as contribute on special teams.

In addition to his quickness and explosiveness, the coaches like how Lee absorbs information quickly.

"He is a very sharp individual," Herring said. "There is a lot to learn, but if anyone can learn it, it's him. He has excellent retention and we're slowly giving him a little taste at each position.

"He's like a magnet just sucking in information."

The Cowboys placed a mid-first round grade on Lee, whose injury history likely dropped him to the 55th pick after playing 10 of 13 games as a senior.

In 2008, Lee was forced to sit out his original senior season and take a medical redshirt after tearing his right ACL in a spring practice. His teammates still thought highly enough of him to name him team captain that year and did so again the next season.

Now healthy, Lee says the injury isn't an issue. The brace he wears is actually on his left knee - the one he sprained in 2009, causing him to miss three games - and even that is just for precautionary reasons.

Lee practiced well without a comfortable brace at mini-camp. First, he left his custom brace at home. The Cowboys had it shipped in time for the final two days, but he still faced a minor dilemma.

"When we got it, his leg was too big," Cowboys head coach Wade Phillips said. "He's strengthened his legs and they were bigger than they were when he wore it during the season."

Still, Lee said he benefited from the one-on-one instruction.

"[Coach Herring] is extremely passionate about coaching," Lee said. "When it comes to fundamentals and intensity, he is a stickler, and it's great to have a coach like that.

"I take pride in learning defenses and learning our defense. That's a way to make yourself a better football player - by concentrating and knowing the defense and putting yourself in the right position."

While some are quick to compare him to Brooking, a 12-year veteran and five-time Pro Bowler, Lee said it's unwarranted until he proves himself on the field.

"It'll be an honor to play with [Brooking] and learn under him," Lee said. "I have a lot of work to do to be even close with him. Until I make plays on the field on the NFL level, you can't really compare me to anybody."

When comparing the mindsets at Penn State to the Cowboys, however, he said he sees a lot of similarities.

"At Penn State, we would compete against each other every day, and we had a lot of good athletes and a lot of hard workers, and I think we compelled each other to become better football players," Lee said. "I think it's the same type of situation here. These guys work hard every single day and push each other to become better football players."

Though initially Lee will make an impact by playing special teams and backing up Brooking and James, the coaches say his work ethic is undeniable as he looks to improve each day.

"He wants to learn," Herring stressed. "Not only does he have great work habits, but he gets upset when he doesn't do things right. He wants to be perfect."
 
I swear this guy is a mirage. No one could be this perfect.

I hope he plays like it.

Like this pick. LOVE reading articles like this.
 
I still do not understand how people could not like this pick just because we moved up to get him. He will be worth it.

In 2008 he lost the entire year as a player. So he basically worked with the team as a Coach. That is why he was named team captain even without suiting up.

His mixture of passion and skill is rare. We stole him.
 
Hostile;3392256 said:
I still do not understand how people could not like this pick just because we moved up to get him. He will be worth it.

In 2008 he lost the entire year as a player. So he basically worked with the team as a Coach. That is why he was named team captain even without suiting up.

His mixture of passion and skill is rare. We stole him.


I feel like we stole him as well. Great teams need these kinds of players (coach on the field who is an emotional leader).

I don't see why there would be any problem with us moving up to get him. That is the way I feel we should always draft. Find players we really like who could help our team and then be proactive in obtaining them. It's what I thought we should have done last year with Max Unger, and it is how I think the team needs to continue to do it.

I couldn't be happier about this years draft. Adding two guys the team had ranked as top 16 picks will tend to do that.
 
Hostile;3392256 said:
I still do not understand how people could not like this pick just because we moved up to get him. He will be worth it.

In 2008 he lost the entire year as a player. So he basically worked with the team as a Coach. That is why he was named team captain even without suiting up.

His mixture of passion and skill is rare. We stole him.

I agree, this was a steal. I guess there are legitimate concerns about injuries but this guy's upside way outweighs those concerns, as far as I'm concerned. This really was an impressive draft by the Cowboys -- at this early stage at least.
 
When you consider how Brooking solidified Wade's defense, and knowing this may be his final year this kid NEEDS to be special. The impact potential is huge if Lee can be the player the Cowboys projected him as. James is a very solid MLB but Dallas hasn't had an "elite" MLB in ages.
 
Lee WILL be a solid player for us. As a PSU Grad 2009, I watched his entire career. Even injured, Lee was given a spot on the travel roster to away games because he functioned as a coach during 2008. He's a great leader, very bright. I'm psyched the Cowboys finally got a PSU player. Even more excited that I actually had a class with Lee, who is a fellow Finance major.
 
Hostile;3392256 said:
I still do not understand how people could not like this pick just because we moved up to get him. He will be worth it.

In 2008 he lost the entire year as a player. So he basically worked with the team as a Coach. That is why he was named team captain even without suiting up.

His mixture of passion and skill is rare. We stole him.

From everything I read, this guy will be a leader on this team, I can see him being a coach when his playing days are done
 
Hostile;3392256 said:
I still do not understand how people could not like this pick just because we moved up to get him. He will be worth it.

In 2008 he lost the entire year as a player. So he basically worked with the team as a Coach. That is why he was named team captain even without suiting up.

His mixture of passion and skill is rare. We stole him.

Indeed....
 
Hostile;3392256 said:
I still do not understand how people could not like this pick just because we moved up to get him. He will be worth it.

In 2008 he lost the entire year as a player. So he basically worked with the team as a Coach. That is why he was named team captain even without suiting up.

His mixture of passion and skill is rare. We stole him.

The reasoning of a few were because he was white, and white linebackers are slow and not any good.
 
This article reads like it was written in the middle of training camp. To be at this point on May 6th is unreal.
 
NextGenBoys;3393315 said:
The reasoning of a few were because he was white, and white linebackers are slow and not any good.

:lmao2: :lmao: 10 more pages guaranteed.
 

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